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Image Conversion

Convert EPS to TIFF — Free Online Converter

Convert Encapsulated PostScript (.eps) to Tagged Image File Format (.tiff) online for free. Fast, secure image conversion with no watermarks or regist...

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วิธีแปลง

1

Upload your .eps file by dragging it into the upload area or clicking to browse.

2

Choose your output settings. The default settings work great for most files.

3

Click Convert and download your .tiff file when it's ready.

About EPS to TIFF Conversion

EPS (Encapsulated PostScript) contains vector artwork for print production, while TIFF (Tagged Image File Format) is the professional standard for high-quality raster image archival. Converting EPS to TIFF rasterizes the PostScript artwork at a specified resolution and stores the result in TIFF's flexible container, which supports lossless compression, CMYK color space, 16-bit depth, and embedded ICC color profiles.

This conversion is essential in prepress and publishing workflows where rasterized versions of vector artwork need to be archived, proofed, or placed into page layouts alongside photographic content.

Why Convert EPS to TIFF?

TIFF is the gold standard for high-quality raster images in publishing and prepress. When EPS artwork needs to be placed into page layouts alongside photographs (which are already in TIFF or PSD), converting the EPS to TIFF provides a consistent raster format across all assets. This simplifies workflow management and ensures all images are processed identically by the print RIP.

TIFF's support for CMYK color space and embedded ICC profiles makes it superior to PNG and JPEG for print-oriented rasterization. An EPS logo converted to CMYK TIFF at 300 DPI is immediately ready for offset printing without further color conversion steps.

Common Use Cases

  • Rasterize EPS artwork to TIFF for inclusion in CMYK print production workflows
  • Archive EPS vector artwork as high-quality TIFF for long-term preservation
  • Create proofing TIFF files from EPS illustrations for prepress review
  • Place rasterized EPS logos alongside photographs in page layout applications
  • Generate 300+ DPI TIFF files from EPS for commercial printing submission

How It Works

Ghostscript renders the EPS at the specified resolution (DPI) with anti-aliasing. The rendered pixel data is written to a TIFF file using configurable compression: no compression (maximum compatibility), LZW (good lossless compression), or ZIP/Deflate (best lossless compression). The TIFF can be output in RGB, CMYK, or grayscale color space. ICC color profiles from the EPS are embedded in the TIFF output. 16-bit per channel depth is supported for workflows requiring extended dynamic range. Sharp handles the TIFF encoding.

Quality & Performance

TIFF output is completely lossless regardless of the compression method chosen. The rasterization quality depends entirely on the DPI setting. At 300 DPI, the output matches commercial print quality with smooth curves and sharp text. At 600 DPI, even the finest vector details are captured. The TIFF format adds no artifacts or quality degradation to the rasterized EPS data.

SHARP EngineFastLossless

Device Compatibility

DeviceEPSTIFF
Windows PCPartialNative
macOSPartialPartial
iPhone/iPadPartialPartial
AndroidPartialPartial
LinuxPartialPartial
Web BrowserNoNo

Tips for Best Results

  • 1Use 300 DPI for standard print and 600 DPI for fine-detail artwork
  • 2TIFF with LZW compression provides the best balance of compatibility and file size reduction
  • 3Output in CMYK color space for offset printing workflows
  • 4Embed ICC color profiles for consistent color reproduction across different devices
  • 5Keep original EPS files alongside TIFF rasterizations for future re-rendering at different resolutions

Related Conversions

EPS to TIFF is the professional path for rasterizing vector artwork for print production and archival. It combines high-resolution rendering with TIFF's professional-grade features for CMYK, color management, and lossless storage.

คำถามที่พบบ่อย

300 DPI is the standard for most commercial print work. 600 DPI is used for fine-detail work like fine text and intricate line art. 150 DPI is sufficient for large-format prints viewed from a distance.
Yes. The conversion can output CMYK TIFF for direct use in offset printing. CMYK color values from the EPS are preserved, and RGB EPS files can be converted to CMYK using standard color profiles.
LZW for maximum compatibility across applications. ZIP/Deflate for smallest file sizes. No compression when receiving systems require uncompressed input. All options are lossless.
Yes, often significantly. A small EPS logo (50 KB of PostScript code) can produce a 10-50 MB TIFF at 300 DPI because the TIFF stores every pixel of the rasterized output.
No. The TIFF is a raster image -- the vector data is consumed during rasterization. Keep the original EPS for future vector editing and re-rasterization at different sizes.

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